Fab CEO Has A Long History Of Mistakes

Jason Goldberg Jason / Goldberg / Facebook Jason Goldberg, CEO of online retailer Fab, is "doomed to repeat his mistakes," according to The Verge. It's a great long-read about the company's history.

For instance, although many people know that Fab has changed business strategy — or "pivoted," in startup parlance — twice in its short history, fewer people remember that this is not the first startup helmed by Goldberg that also pivoted (twice).

In the mid-2000s, Goldberg founded Jobster, a careers site that went through two pivots before being acquired for a fraction of its former value, The Verge reports. It was an expensive lesson for Goldberg's backers, The Verge says:

In an interview after he started Fab, Goldberg reflected on his Jobster days. "I made every mistake in the book," he explained. "I … basically got educated on that $48 million on how to start companies."

Here's Goldberg's history, per The Verge:

2004: Starts Jobster, an employee referral site.

Company pivots twice, first as a search engine then as a social network.

2006: 41% of Jobster staffers are laid off; company is sold for pennies on the dollar.